It took a decade, but the Wisconsin Badgers are back on top. For partying that is.

The Princeton Review recently released it's survey of best party schools and the University of Wisconsin-Madison was No. 1, followed by West Virginia University and the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Illinois took the top spot last year.

Not everyone is celebrating like the UW student body.

"Our big thing is you don't have to always drink," Christie Davis from the La Crosse County Health Dept. said. "We can have community celebrations. We can have fun events that take place that don't ... need to be the focal point for why we get together for celebrations."

UW also placed first in the "lots of beer" category and fifth in "lots of hard liquor." Luckily, the Badgers were also first in "health services" in the Review's 2017 edition of The Best of 381 Colleges.

Davis says drinking behaviors in college shouldn't be overlooked, especially when you begin making excuses like, "So and so doesn't have a drinking problem. They just like to go out on weekends. They like to have a good time," Davis said.

"Binge drinking on a regular basis is not a normal thing, is not a healthy thing," she continued.

It was a condition that forced him onto the transplant list for both his lungs and his heart. Doctors never did find Miller a donor.

At first Miller thought he had a common cold. When it didn't get better, doctors throught it was maybe Asthma.

Then he collapsed during a football game early last year. Days later his lung collapsed and doctors finally figured out what was wrong. Days after that, the other lung collapsed as coach Brad Groth explains.

"It was the next week, then, that he was air lifted to Rochester," Groth said. "Then it all started sinking in like, 'Holy crap, what's going on here?'

"He had to be air lifted. Then, a week and a half later, we're going to Plainview and his brother is getting texts on the bus about emergency surgery and he's going on life support. It was just a crazy ride. Luckily, we were playing in Plainvew and we could get his brother off the bus and onto the school van so he could get to Rochester."

La Crescent will rest Miller's No. 28 jersey on the bench during all its games this year, along with, again, wearing a sticker on their helmets with Miller's name and number.

The high school did its best to keep Miller involved and up to speed, while he was in the hosptial, last year.

Groth isn't sure if his passing will be harder on the team this year, now that he's gone, as compared to last.

"There was such hope that he would have gotten his heart and lung transplant," Groth said. "Then in May, he had gotten taken off the list. And, after he was taken off the list, everyone kind of knew. So, I think everyone kind of prepared themselves that way."

La Crescent has its work cut out for it tonight, hosting the defending state champions, Caledonia.

In going unbeaten last season, Caledonia outscored its opponents 497-0 in the first half of all its games. The Warriors won state 40-0 over Pipestone.